Page 6 University Daily Kansan Monday, April 18. 1955 Displays of Many Countries Seen at Foreign Festival By BOB GREENE Entertaining, enjoyable, and educational describes the Foreign Student festival held Friday in the Student Union ballroom. Twenty displays, with some countries grouped together, made up the exhibition. They included: India; Israel; Japan and the Ryukyu Islands; Pakistan; Mexico; France; Argentina, Bolivia, Costa Rica, and Peru; Liberia and Ethiopia; Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden; Guatemala and Panama; Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom. Austria, Germany, and the Saar Burma, Malaya, North Borneo, Philippines, and Thailand; Italy, Korea and Switzerland; China and Formosa; Cyprus and Greece; Egypt; Iran and Iraq; Belgium and Holland; Ecuador, Trinidad, and Venezuela. Cigarets from Colombia were given to the audience by Armida Kay Pun, college senior from Peru. Pamphlets of various countries were distributed and pineapple fiber materials from the Philippines were explained. Chancellor Franklin D. Murphy gave the welcome address and Brian Dunning, graduate student from Surrey, England, was the master of ceremonies for the program. YWCA Luncheon To Be Wednesday The Faculty Forum committee of the YMCA will hold a luncheon Wednesday in the English room of the Student Union. William Ellis associate secretary of the United Student Christian council, will speak. Mr. Ellis, who is a recent graduate of Harvard Law school, will discuss the concept of justice, power and love. Persons who wish to attend the luncheon should make reservations in the YMCA office in the Student Union by 5 p.m. tomorrow. The luncheon will cost $1. University to House 700 Men for Relays Approximately 700 athletes will be housed by the University during the Kansas Relays, April22 and 23 according to the dormitory office. About 600 of these men will be from the high school teams participating in the meet. College athletes will stay in the newly-completed Carruth-O'Leary men's dormitory. High school students entered in the relays will stay in McCook hall, Robinson gym, and Robinson annex. Bedding will be furnished by the University. Harzfeld's That old spring fever's got us in its spell! That's where Harzfeld's come in-for shorts, tee shirts and everything in sports wear for those lazy hours in the sun. Also, formals for the spring parties. 12th and Oread Store Hours Open 9:30 to 5:30 Thurs. nite 'til 8 p.m Maytag Grant Set for Fall KU will be one of eight Universities included in the engineering and commerce scholarship program started this year by the Maytag Company foundation, Inc., of Newton, Iowa. The program provides $200 supplementary scholarships to students entering their senior year of study this fall. The scholarship at KU will be known as the Maytag Scholarship in Commerce. The student receiving the award must be in the upper 25 per cent of the class. Good character, technical and administrative potential, extra-curricular activities, and need will be considered. Other schools receiving the commerce scholarship are Iowa State college. Ames; State University of Iowa, Iowa City; University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; University of Missouri, Columbia; University of Nebraska, Lincoln; Purdue university, Lafayette, Ind., and the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Students From Asia To Speak Tonight Four exchange students from Asia will speak on the contrasts and similarities in academic life in their countries and the United States. The symposium will be held at 8 p.m. today in the Jayhawk room of the Student Union. The students are Ni a Pe, graduate student from Rangoon, Burma; Ghulam Farid, special graduate student from Lahore, Pakistan; Gopal Khare, graduate student from India; and Sachiko Sugawa, graduate student from Kyoto, Japan. Willard A. Hanna, visiting American Universities Field staff speaker, discussed the case of the fishermen injured by atomic dust Friday at the Sociology club coffee forum. Hanna Discusses Atom Dust Case The case resulted when the crew of a Japanese fishing vessel contractor raidion sickness after I-boat attacks in 1954 on Bikini, atoll in the Pacific. Dr. Hanna said the effect the incident had on the Japanese people and the part played by the Japanese press was conditioned to a great extent by the dropping of the A-bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan, during World War II. Engineers Given $2,000 Fellowship The department of chemical engineering has been awarded at $2,000 graduate fellowship by the Ethyl corporation of Detroit, Michigan. The fellowship, to be given for 1955-56, consists of $1,500 tuition, fees, and $500 for equipment. It will be given to an American citizen who is in his last year of work for a doctor's degree. The graduate student, who will be chosen by the department of chemical engineering, will be allowed to select his own field of research. The Ethyl corporation is interested in unit operations, research, fluid, mechanics, reaction kinetics, petroleum technology, thermodynamics, and physical properties. Tri-Delt Scholarship Available Applications for the annual Delta Delta Delta $100 scholarship are available at the dean of women's office and must be in by noon Friday, April 22. Texas has 652 tree farms, more than any other state. Livestock and poultry on farms and ranches in the United States increased three per cent during 1954. Modern ELECTRIC cooking is so clean you can actually run your white gloves across the cooking unit of an ELECTRIC range without getting them dirty! What's more—walls, curtains and furniture stay clean too, when you cook ELECTRICALLY. Why don't you join the ranks of modern housewives who have found that an ELECTRIC range is the answer to clean cooking? You'll be pleased beyond belief with the flameless, smokeless, soot-free operation of an automatic ELECTRIC range. Buy yours soon so you can enjoy clean ELECTRIC cooking, too. Take advantage of KPL's $20 offer. See your Certified Redi Klipper, dealer for details on how you can purchase a modern electric range. you can save **Petitions for producer, assistant producer, director, and business manager of the 1856 Rock Chalk Revue must be submitted to the YMCA office before 5 p.m. tomorrow.** fficial Bulletin Applications for Student Union activities officers and board members may be obtained and must be turned in to the SU office. Student Union by Wednesday. TODAY Museum of Art record concert, 4 p.m. Schone Mullerin (The Maid of the Mill) Mathematical colloquium, 4 p.m., room 203. Strong hall. Dr. Stephen Juhasi Worset Research Institute, Hydrauli Anaesthetics institute, Exchang Problems" with demonstration Engineerettes, 8 p.m., home of Mrs. Douglas Don Alexander, Interior Decoration KU Dames' child study group, 8 p.m. Women's club lounge, Museum of Art Art. Beatrice Wright: "Sex Education for Our Children." All KU Dames invited. YM-YWCA International committee's symposium on Asia, 8 p.m., Jayhawk room. Student Union. Students from four campuses in the nation's countries and the United States. World University service meeting for organizational representatives, 8:30 p.m. room. Student Union Peyton Shirer VUS, and Wm. Ellis, USCC, speakers. TOMORROW Episcopal morning prayer 6:45 a.m. Hill communion 7 a.m. Danfortch communion. Engineering convocation. 11 a.m. Fisher theater United University Council applaud Morning meditation, 7:30-7:50 a.m. Danforth chapel. Everyone invited. Pre-nursing club, 7:30 p.m., dining room. Fraser Nursing students from medical school. Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p.m. Schoenberg; Verkartea Nacht; Anton Reicha; Quintet for Wind Instruments in E minor. Phi Delta Kappa dinner meeting, v.p. English room, Student Union. Mr.William D. Wolfe, superintendent of Lawrence public schools, speaker. Forensic League all-University symposium on "Honor Systems," 7:30 p.m. Ballroom, Student Union. Everyone invited. CCUN all-member meeting, 4 p.m. Ellis: "Pressure of Communist Expansion." Humanities Lecture, 8 p.m., Fraser Theater. Mr. James Sweeney, director Faculty Art On Exhibit A group exhibition by the faculty of the department of drawing and painting will be shown for two weeks beginning yesterday, at the Tonkea High school. Contributing to the exhibit at John Armstrong and Robert Sudlow, instructors; A. Dwight Burnham, assistant professor; Raymond Eastwood, professor; Robert Green, associate professor. The show, under the auspices of the Topeka Art Guild, will consist of 50 pictures, mostly oil paintings. Two Education Men Preside at Meeting Dean Kenneth E. Anderson, president of the association, will preside. Dr. Herbert A. Smith, associate professor and director of Bureau of Educational Research and Service, is chairman for the third annual review of research in science teaching. Two members of the School of Education faculty will have leading roles in the annual meeting of the National Association for Research in Science Teaching today through Wednesday in New York City. of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, N.Y.: "The Language of Painting." WEDNESDAY Honor system steering committee. 12 noon, cafeteria alcove, Student Union. Museum of Art record concert, noon and 4 p. bach. The Well Tempered Clavier, Preludes and Fugues No. 17-24. Education club, 4 p. bach. 306 Student Institute. Faculty Student coffee, 4 p.m. Student Buffalo Bill Ellis, YMCA guest speaker. "Christmas Party." El Ateneo se reune a las 4:30 en 113 Strong. Que vengan todos. History club, "t. 7 p.m., Pine room. Studio house," "Japan-Asia." Refreshments l lecturer: "Japan-Asia." Refreshments By appointment purveyors of soap to the late King George VI, Yardley & Co., Ltd., London Yardley brings you a new feeling of well-being London style The way to arrive at this happy state, gentlemen, is to use Yardley After Shower Powder morning and night. Here is a cooling, masculine body powder—conceived in England and now made in America—which has a special drying action effective in the muggiest weather. Its deodorant properties are invaluable. At your campus store, $1.10 plus tax. Makers and distributors for U. S. A., Yardley of London, Inc., New York.